with a book I need on it, and new the price is 130.00, but it's advertising used for $2.50 - which of course sounds too good to be true. I've never heard of the website, anybody have any info or opinions?
I've never heard of the site, but I just looked and clicked on "see detail" under where it says $2.69 Quick Buy. On that section you can ask the seller a question. I would make sure that it's the correct version that you'll need. Usually the version that is really cheap is SUPER old and it's not the one you'll be needing for your current class. Good luck! I hope it's the right one because then that'd be sweet deal!
I've purchased books through Alibris before with good luck. They are a network of booksellers across the country. You aren't really buying from Allibris - they are kind of like ebay
Just be careful when you pick, and double check the ISBN and the edition, or you may end up with an old version that is useless to you.
It might be fine, but I like websites to have some sort of verification stamp on them-- Whether from paypal, or otherwise. If you enter the site to put in your credit card information, and there is NO "Https://" before your link-- DO NOT put anything in there! It's not a secure server
Alibris is a really reputable book website, but I think that they allow different people and bookstores to sell books on their website. Most are reputable and will send you your book really quickly, but you ARE always taking a chance.
That said, a book that is 127 dollars off list price is probably a really old edition or maybe in poor shape. An old edition may or may not be a problem depending on how you use the book in your class. In some classes, I've been able to get away with an older edition or an international edition, but in one class we had to do all the questions at the end of the chapter and all of the numbers in the International Edition were WAY different. If you want to be sure to have the right edition, I'd be sure to search using the ISBN number instead of just the title of the book because each new edition has a different number.
Thanks for the advice! As of now, I've only got 100 dollars to buy text books with until September 3rd, and classes start on the 25th of August. Not a huge deal, but it usually takes a while to ship anything up to Alaska. But even on Ebay it's impossible to find anything for under 60 dollars - and one of my books for this semester is 250 dollars. Mannnn college prices suck.
I bought a textbook from them a few years back. It was dirt cheap, way cheaper than it was at the bookstore. I had the intentions of using the book and selling it to the book store at the end of the semester. I got the book and the cover was missing.....
I now know that the cover is removed from a book for a very good reason. They usually do this when a book is ordered off the shelf (discontinued, didn't sell, whatever).
I complained several times and never heard back from the company.
Make sure of the edition before you buy it at that price--it may be a lot older than the one your professor is using. My DD bought her textbooks at half.com and had good success and pretty good savings.
I've not used this service, but I checked the book on amazon.com, which I use a LOT. There are several editions of the book, and on amazon.com the book is listed at $130 new and for used & new (indicating private sellers) it ranges from 38 cents to $64, but there are several editions. And you might need a specific edition.
Sometimes the variation in a textbook edition is so minute, that an old edition is "just as good" as the current one, but sometimes this isn't the case.
My understanding is that alibris has a good reputation, but I've never used it. However, I routinely buy from the private sellers on ebay, and I always check their feedback scores first. If alibris has seller ratings, I'd do the same.
At amazon, the s/h is usually about $4.
So either at alibris or amazon, you would be able to spend less than $5 to take a chance on a (probably) earlier edition of the book. But whether or not you want to take that chance, is a more difficult question. You could talk to the instructor and ask his or her opinion or input (he or she might be familiar with the differences between editions if he or she has used the same textbook for several years), or ask if you would be able to borrow a current textbook to compare it to the edition you've got (some instructors keep extra copies of the textbooks, or have them on reserve at the school library).
Actually, kaplods, there's no quick way to tell how much a new edition has been changed--but often there are many changes. I work in textbook publishing, and although it's true that some changes are "cosmetic," sometimes whole sections and the information in them change, and sometimes problems sets and such change, and that can put the student at a disadvantage if using an older edition.
Make sure the ISBN matches, and look around for good prices. But be aware that the sites that allow people to sell on them don't do any screening or verification of the sellers. Look for sellers that have a good reputation--usually this is indicated by reviews, stars, etc.
Last year I ordered a philosophy book for $4 used on half.com..
The regular price is $80, and when I tried getting it used at my college , it was $60!! The condition was also better than I expected.. it just looked like it was used once or twice~ So I mean, you could look up reviews about the site to make sure it's legit and double-check the ISBN.. so it's possible..
Personally Half.com has saved me SOO much money.. that and amazon.com so if you're feeling iffy about the site, you could try one of those, you may find someone selling their book for around the same price.
My freshmen year my college professor actually recommended half.com. But I haven't bought a book from the website because I was still a little weary of it. I have never heard of the other site, but if it sounds too good to be true it probably isn't.
Alibris is definitely a reputable website. I work in a library and although we don't order from Alibris right now, I can tell you it is one of the biggest online sites to find out of print books. However, like some parts of Amazon, many of the items are actually sold by independent bookstores. You can check the individual seller's reliability rating before you decide to purchase it.
abebooks.com is another very reliable used book site.
And there's also paperbackswap.com which is not just for paperbacks. It is a free (to join and to use) book swapping site. You list all the books you don't want and another list for all those you do. The systems matches wants. You pay to mail out books (media rate) to their new owners and get a "credit" which you then use to order the books you want (which only cost that one credit, nothing more). No SPAM, no advertisements. It's a Great site with more than 2 million books in circulation. (they also have a CD and DVD sister site and you can swap credits between the sites - I usually mail out CDs and use the credits to get books and movies... all my dieting books and workout DVDs have come from these sites (and usually gone back into the mix again after a while.)
Feel free to PM if you have questions but the sites are great and I'm not affiliated in anyway (I do get a credit if you say I sent you but I always just give that back to the new member anyway)